Ja. Al-tawfiq et al., Standardization of the experimental model of Haemophilus ducreyi infectionin human subjects, J INFEC DIS, 178(6), 1998, pp. 1684-1687
Human volunteers were challenged with Haemophilus ducreyi. Twenty subjects
were inoculated with 2 doses (similar to 30 cfu) of live and 1 dose of heat
-killed bacteria at 3 sites on the arm. Eight subjects were assigned to bio
psy 1 or 4 days after inoculation, and 12 were biopsied after they develope
d a painful pustular lesion or were followed until disease resolved. Papule
s developed at 95% of 40 sites infected with live bacteria (95% confidence
interval [CI], 83.1%-99.4%). In 24 sites followed to end point, 27% of the
papules resolved, 69% (95% CI, 47.1%-86.6%) evolved into pustules, and 4% r
emained at the papular stage. Recovery rates of H. ducreyi from surface cul
tures ranged from 13% to 41%. H, ducreyi was recovered from biopsies of 12
of 15 pustules and 1 of 7 papules, suggesting that H. ducreyi replicates be
tween the papular and pustular stages of disease.